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Daily Record
Lifestyle
Ben Glaze & Lizzie Buchan & Lucy Farrell

The Right to Buy scheme and why Boris Johnson is facing backlash

Boris Johnson has been slammed after a "desperate" attempt to revive Margaret Thatcher's Right to Buy (RTB) policy, days before the UK council elections.

A new RTB scheme would aid tenants who rent from private housing associations.

Johnson told officials to draw up the plans in the last fortnight to help young people struggling to get on to the property ladder, the Telegraph reported.

But what exactly is the Right to Buy scheme, when was it first introduced, and why is Boris facing backlash?

What is the Right to Buy initiative?

Boris Johnson is understood to want a new Right to Buy scheme for tenants who rent from housing associations (Mirror Online)

The Right to Buy scheme (RTB) was first brought in under the Housing Act 1980 in one of many reforms pioneered by Margaret Thatcher.

Under RTB, those who rented from private housing associations could purchase their social homes at a discounted price.

Boris is not the first prime minister to suggest this, as RTB was first revived in David Cameron's 2015 Conservative manifesto.

Though that plan failed to materialise, Mr Johnson committed to consider new pilots for the scheme ahead of the 2019 general election.

Why Is Boris facing backlash?

Prime Minister Boris Johnson wants politicians at Westminster to move on from partygate (PA)

Critics have accused the PM of "talking up the policies of the past" to shift attention away from the growing Parliamentary sleaze row, following the resignation of Tory MP Neil Parish for watching porn in the Commons.

Voters head to the polls on Thursday, May 5 to elect 200 councils across Britain, in the PM's first electoral test since the Partygate scandal erupted.

The Right to Buy plan also comes as Mr Johnson's pledge to build 300,000 homes a year was under threat due to a ruling by the Government's environment watchdog.

Officials in the Levelling up department are reportedly “urgently investigating” how to fight the ban on housebuilding imposed by Natural England last month, which now affects 42 local authority areas.

Up to 100,000 new homes have been put on hold by the moratorium that affects large parts of Norfolk, Hampshire, Devon and the northeast, according to the Times.

What do the experts think?

Shadow Levelling Up Secretary Lisa Nandy said: "This is desperate stuff from a tired government, repackaging a plan from 2015.

"Millions of families in the private rented sector with low savings and facing sky high-costs and rising bills, need far more ambitious plans to help them buy their own home.

"These proposals would worsen the shortage of affordable homes."

Liberal Democrat Treasury spokeswoman Christine Jardine accused the Prime Minister of “talking up policies of the past”.

She said: "This is desperate stuff from Boris Johnson.

"Instead of copying and pasting from old manifestos he should be helping families on the brink."

Polly Neate, chief executive of Shelter, said: “The hare-brained idea of extending Right-to-Buy to housing associations is the opposite of what the country needs.

"There could not be a worse time to sell off what remains of our last truly affordable social homes.

“The living cost crisis means more people are on the brink of homelessness than homeownership – nearly 34,000 households in England became homeless between October and December last year, more than 8,000 of them were families with children.

“Right to Buy has already torn a massive hole in our social housing stock as less than 5% of the homes sold off have ever been replaced. These half-baked plans have been tried before and they’ve failed.

"Over one million households are stuck on social housing waiting lists in England, and with every bill skyrocketing, the government should be building more social homes so we have more not less.”

Polly McKenzie, chief executive of think tank Demos, said: “All forms of Right to Buy privilege those who’ve got into social housing over those still renting in the private sector - even though those in the social sector are the ones with discounted rents and high security of tenure.

"That might make sense if people in social housing were structurally more deserving or more in need. But it’s much more complicated than that.

"New social housing tenants have often very high needs - that’s how they made it to the top of the epic waiting lists. So not going to be in a position to buy.”

A Government spokeswoman said: "We want everyone to be given the chance to own a home of their own, and we keep all options to increase home ownership under review.

"Recent statistics show that the annual number of first-time buyers is at a 20 year high, helped by our Help to Buy Scheme for first time buyers and Mortgage Guarantee Scheme to expand the availability of low deposit mortgages."

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